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Our aim is to equip the student as soon as
possible to defend themselves against the most common attacks. Once the
student has mastered these techniques more difficult scenarios are
addressed to build a support system that will enable the student to deal
with almost any situation. By teaching concepts through techniques
students are taught how to read a situation and react/respond
accordingly, even if they’ve not experienced the exact same thing in
training. Giving students the ability to improvise is an important
element of our training.
Awareness, avoidance and pre-emption are placed high
in order of priority – but we recognise that you can’t always avoid or
run away from problems so we teach everything that is needed for self
defence when it’s necessary in all environments, including highly
confined, crowded spaces like chip shops. “Chip Shop Krav Maga” was our
working title for the new system but we thought it may look a little odd
on a t-shirt and not translate well for those countries that call a crisp
a chip...

The founders of Urban Krav Maga can draw on many years
of experience in a wide array of fighting arts from traditional martial
arts, reality based systems to MMA. We continued training in
some of these systems after we became instructors in various Israeli
fighting systems. This training continued to inform our teaching and
this, along with our real world experience led us to adapt and modify
techniques, combining the education we had gained in the Israeli systems
with that from other systems we’d experienced – we believe this to in be the original and true spirit of Krav Maga (hence why
we maintain the name). We found that these modified and innovative
techniques were working well for our students – this was the beginning
of Urban Krav Maga.
Basically we wanted to teach a system that:
- combined
the best elements of all the systems we have hitherto studied with the mentality of “this is the problem –what is the solution?” as opposed to
the more abstract, indirect approach of many traditional arts;
- contained a range
of techniques that were not dependent on punching power and/or brute
strength. All techniques need to work against stronger, heavier,
taller opponents. We also acknowledge that different students
sometimes need different or modified solutions so there is a
personal development approach for the student;
- was genuinely collegiate and
evolutionary in its approach. There’s a very wide range of experience in
the Technical Committee, everybody has a say in how techniques develop
and, crucially, nobody is hidebound by ego or adherence to tradition –
the one priority is to make techniques work as well as possible for as
many people as possible. We also listen to students – the Genesis of the
system actually lay in our observations re what worked for them under
pressure; what didn’t work and our debates re how we could improve;
- recognised the importance of pre-emptive strikes for self-defence –
action always beats reaction;
- took a genuinely scenario-based approach.
In Urban Krav Maga, the core syllabus is based around the disciplines
and techniques needed to defend the 10 most common street attacks. These
are listed in frequency order here. The core syllabus also contains a
range of techniques applicable to female self-defence, grappling
(stand-up and on the ground), fighting/sparring techniques and weapons
defences.
We do not make any claims that our techniques are used
by any military organisation. We’re happy for them to be judged on their
merits, not assumed to be good because of their supposedly being taught
to a regular army or Special Forces Unit. We make no apologies for this
civilian approach: a knife defence based on somebody attacking like they
were making a committed bayonet thrust will not be so effective as one
that is based on somebody stabbing with an aggressive pumping motion
with fast recoil. We make no political judgements about the middle east,
it is a complicated situation where too may innocent lives are lost on
both sides and many parties from east and west are involved with vested
interests. We have always enjoyed martial arts as they are a great forum
for people of different background to come together, train, learn useful
skills and make new friends. We train hard at our schools but we like a
friendly and open atmosphere. As stated we retain the term Krav Maga as our approach
reflects that on which Krav Maga was originally founded and we are of
course indebted to the experiences we have gained training with the
various Israeli Fighting Systems.
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